Table Of Content
- Law that ended single-family zoning is struck down for five Southern California cities
- NEW AMERICAN CUISINE. OLD TOWN FLAVOR.
- MLB ghost kitchens to whip up ballpark food for delivery and pickup, courtesy of IHOP
- Why support the Library?
- More real estate resources
- College protests updates: Police crackdown leads to hundreds of arrests

The home, south of the 101 Freeway and west of Encino Avenue, is owned by Amir Esmailian, a music executive and producer, according to media reports. A full complement of Nautical charts for waters off the coast of Los Angeles including the National Ocean Survey charts for Los Angeles and Long Beach harbors. Nirenstein's Real Estate Atlas of 1953 shows major business streets in Southern California area with businesses identified and accompanied by aerial photos of districts such as Wilshire boulevard and others. A file of historic street guides of Los Angeles by Gillespie, Renie and Thomas Brothers. This group includes detailed street atlases and maps including the 1925 & 1929 Gillespie guide, a 1931 Renie, a 1923 street guide by the Lyon moving company and Thomas Brothers guides from 1946 to the present.
Law that ended single-family zoning is struck down for five Southern California cities
A group of local scientists, architects, and builders formed a Joint Technical Committee on Earthquake Protection to propose ways to minimize loss of life and property in future earthquakes. The committee was chaired by CalTech physicist Robert Millikan, and included architects John C. Austin and Sumner Hunt. In June 1933 they released their report, which advocated for stronger building codes. In 1934, the fourth Los Angeles Times building at 1st and Spring streets was nearing completion.
NEW AMERICAN CUISINE. OLD TOWN FLAVOR.
Esmailian is a talent manager, record producer and co-founder of XO Records, KTLA reported. He underwent surgery and was expected to survive, according to reports from Fox 11. National Oceanic and Aeronautic Administration Aeronautical charts covering the Los Angeles area. The earthquake is also included in John Fante's Ask the Dust (1939), and the earthquake scene in the novel is subject of a public art installation in Pershing Square called "Hey Day" by Barbara McCarren. The image below of the fourth Los Angeles Times building probably was taken at the same time.
MLB ghost kitchens to whip up ballpark food for delivery and pickup, courtesy of IHOP
"UCLA has a long history of peaceful protest and we are heartbroken to report that today, some physical altercations broke out among demonstrators on Royce Quad," Mary Osako, vice chancellor of UCLA Strategic Communications said. The student protests -- some of which have turned into around-the-clock encampments -- have erupted throughout the nation following arrests and student removals at Columbia University in New York City. Students at schools including Yale University, New York University, Harvard University, University of Texas at Austin, University of Southern California and more have launched protests.
LIST: Restaurant lineup, dates announced for 2024 Richmond Restaurant Week - WRIC ABC 8News
LIST: Restaurant lineup, dates announced for 2024 Richmond Restaurant Week.
Posted: Tue, 05 Mar 2024 08:00:00 GMT [source]
Before the various theaters of war opened in the late '30s and early '40s, the Nazis trained their eyes on the theaters in Hollywood. Hitler and his chief propagandist, Joseph Goebbels, realized the power of the film industry’s messaging, and they resented the unsavory portrayals of WWI-era Germany. Determined to curb negative portrayals of the nation and Nazis, they used their diplomats to pressure American studios to “create understanding and recognition for the Third Reich,” and refused to play films in Germany that were unfavorable to Hitler and his regime. Odyssey, the eagerly anticipated seafood restaurant from the Alewife team of Lee Gregory and Bobo Catoe, can be found at 6619 Patterson Ave. Harry’s at Hofheimer, a modern speakeasy, has opened at the Hofheimer Building in Scott’s Addition at 2818 W.

“I uncovered so many plots to kill Jews that I absolutely believe, had Leon Lewis' spies not penetrated and foiled every single one of those plots, some of them would have succeeded,” he said. It was clear to Lewis that it was time to act, but he found the Jewish community divided as to how best to combat rising anti-Semitism, and the U.S. government was more concerned with tracking Communism than fascism. "We'll leave it to local authorities to determine how these protests are managed," Kirby told Stephanopoulos, "but we want them to be peaceful protests and obviously we don't want to see anybody hurt in the process of peacefully protesting." "Since the Israel-Gaza war began, journalists have been paying the highest price- their lives-to defend our right to the truth. Each time a journalist dies or is injured, we lose a fragment of that truth," CPJ Program Director Carlos Martínez de la Serna said in a statement. According to a preliminary investigation released Friday by the Committee to Protect Journalists, nearly 100 journalists have been killed covering the war in Gaza. One organizer complained that the White House Correspondents' Association - which represents the hundreds of journalists who cover the president - largely has been silent since the first weeks of the war about the killings of Palestinian journalists.
Protest organizers said they wanted to bring attention to the high numbers of Palestinian and other Arab journalists killed by Israel's military since the war began in October. Kelly O'Donnell, president of the correspondents' association, opened the event by reminding the audience of the important work that journalists do but noting that the dinner is happening at "a complex moment for our nation," and in a decisive election year. With hundreds of protesters rallying against the war in Gaza outside the event and concerns over the conflict and humanitarian crisis in Gaza and the perils for journalists covering the conflict, the war hung over this year's event.
The house was designed by Sumner Spaulding in 1933 in the style of a French chateau. It was built for engineer and contractor Lynn Atkinson,[3] who commissioned the property for his wife. She found it "pretentious", so the couple never lived there.[4] The house, located on 10 acres (4 hectares), with gardens designed by Henri Samuel, later was owned by Arnold Kirkeby and then Jerry Perenchio. A second poster advertises the Los Angeles County sheriff’s charity barbecue on July 15. An article in the July 16, 1934, Los Angeles Times reported 60,000 people attended the event.
He designed several homes in Los Angeles, and the destruction of one of the few that remain is part of the considerable backlash. Ellwood’s design for the single-family house was commissioned by couple Martin and Eva Zimmerman in 1949 and was featured in Progressive Architecture magazine shortly after, according to the Eichler Network, which covers mid-century California homes. In 2004, the house changed hands to its last owners, couple Sam and Hilda Newman-Rolfe.
This earthquake prompted the federal government to play an active role in disaster relief. The government created the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, providing loans for reconstructing buildings that were affected during the natural disaster. The Los Angeles Public Library serves the largest most diverse population of any library in the United States. At its core, Hitler in Los Angeles subverts the idea that there wasn’t active and significant resistance to Nazism in America before WWII.
The entire set of Historical Maps of Greater Los Angeles compiled for the Bureau of Engineering covering the city from 1847 to the 1960s. This invaluable set contains over one thousand maps on aperture cards which are mounted slides that can be copied on department microfiche reader-printers. We also have Maps of the City Clerk which is also on aperture cards that show bridges, dams, sewers, tunnels and other features of Los Angeles growth from the 19th century to the 1960s. But Lewis, who knew a number of German-American vets from his work with the Disabled American Veterans, appealed to his spies’ sense of patriotism. The spies, Ross said, “risked their lives because they believed that when a hate group attacks one group of Americans, it's up to every American to rally to defend them.” And their loyalty to Germany didn’t translate to Hitler; many despised him for what he had done to their ancestral nation.
Lewis’s network of spies, many of whom were trusted by top Bund officials in L.A., reported on and worked to interrupt a wide range of haunting plots, including the lynching of film producers Louis B. Mayer and Samuel Goldwyn and star Charlie Chaplin. One called for using machine guns to kill residents of the Boyle Heights neighborhood (a predominantly Jewish area), and another conspired to create a fake fumigation company to surreptitiously kill Jewish families (a chilling precursor to the gas chambers of Nazi concentration camps). Lewis’s spies even uncovered plans to blow up a munitions plant in San Diego and to destroy several docks and warehouses along the coast.
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